Kate stood before a teetering knobless
bureau reflecting upon the singular coincidence which
should place her in the same room for her second social
affair in the Prouty House as that to which she had
been assigned upon her first. The bureau had
been new then and, to her inexperienced eyes, had
looked the acme of luxurious magnificence. She
recalled as vividly as though the lapse of time consisted
of days, not years, the round eager face, that had
looked out of the glass.
She had been only seventeen-that
other girl-and every emotion that she felt
was to be read in her expressive face and in her candid
eyes. It was different-the face of
this woman of twenty-eight who calmly regarded Kate.
She turned her head and took in the
room with a sweeping glance.
It was there, in the middle of the
floor, that she had torn off and flung her wreath;
it was in the corner over there that she had thrown
her bunting dress. On the spot where the rug with
the pink child and the red-eyed dog used to be, she
had stood with the tears streaming down her cheeks-tears
of humiliation, of fierce outraged pride, feeling that
the most colossal, crushing tragedy that possibly
could come into any life had fallen upon her.
It came back to the last detail, that
evening of torture-the audible innuendos
and the whispering behind hands, the lifted eyebrows
and the exchange of mocking looks, the insolent eyes
of Neifkins, and the final deliberate insult-she
lived it all again as she stood before the mirror
calmly arranging her hair.
And Hughie! Her hands paused
in mid-air. Could she ever forget that moment
of agony on the stairs when she thought he was going
to fail her-that he was ashamed, and a
coward! But what a thoroughbred he had been!
She could better appreciate now the courage it had
required.
Afterward-in the moonlight-on
the way home-his contrition, his sympathy,
his awkward tenderness. “I love you-I’ll
love you as long as I live!” Her lips parted
as she listened to the boyish voice-vibrating,
passionate. He had come to her again and she had
sent him away for the sake of the hour that was shortly
to arrive. She had reached her goal. More
than she had dared hope for in her wildest dreams had
come to her at last. She had money, power, success,
a name. A choking lump rose in her throat.
It was no longer of any use to refuse
to admit it to herself-she wanted Hugh.
She wanted him with all her heart and soul and strength,
nothing and no one else. She threw herself upon
the uninviting bed, and in the hour when she should
have been exultant Kate cried.
Throughout Prouty, among the socially
select, the act of dressing for the function at the
Prouty House was taking place. This dinner given
to Prentiss by the members of the Boosters Club
was the most important event from every viewpoint
that had taken place since the town was incorporated.
It would show the bankrupt stockholders where they
were “at,” since Prentiss had reserved
the announcement of his decision regarding the irrigation
project for this occasion. In addition, he had
asked the privilege of inviting a guest, which was
granted as readily as if he had requested permission
to appear in his bathrobe, for they had no desire
to offend a man who in their minds occupied an analogous
position with the ravens that brought food to Elijah
starving in the wilderness.
Prentiss had been investigated and
his rating obtained. All that Toomey had claimed
for him was found to be the truth-he was
an indisputable millionaire, with ample means to put
through whatever he undertook. The effect of
Prentiss’s presence was noticeable throughout
the town, and innumerable small extravagances
were committed on the strength of what was going to
happen “when the project went through.”
But in no person was the change so
marked as in Toomey, who felt that he had come into
his own at last. As an old and dear friend of
Prentiss’s his prestige was almost restored.
He fairly reeled with success, while, with no one
daring to refuse him credit because of the influence
he was presumed to exert, he ate tinned lobster for
breakfast-to show that he could.
If Prentiss suspected that he was
being made capital of, exploited and exhibited like
a rare bird, there was nothing in his manner to indicate
that he entertained the thought. While it was
true that his first friendliness towards Toomey never
came back, his impersonal, businesslike courtesy in
their intercourse was beyond reproach.
A report had been current that Kate
and “Toomey’s millionaire” knew each
other-some one in the Prouty House had seen
them meet-but as she returned almost immediately
to the ranch and had not been in town since, the rumor
died for want of nourishment. No one but Mrs.
Toomey gave it a second thought. But she gave
it many thoughts; it stuck in her mind and she could
not get it out.
To her, the resemblance between the
two was very noticeable, and another meeting with
Prentiss made her marvel that no one observed it but
herself. In spite of the different spelling of
the name, was there, perchance, some relationship?
The persistent thought filled her with a vague disquietude.
It was so strongly in her mind while they dressed for
the affair at the Prouty House that Toomey’s
conversation was largely a soliloquy.
Surveying himself complacently in
the glass, it pleased Mr. Toomey to be jocose.
“Say, Old Girl, how long will
it take you to pack your war-bag when I get this deal
pulled off? It’s a safe bet that this cross
roads can’t see me for dust, once I get that
commission in my mitt.” He turned and looked
at her sharply. “What’s the matter
now, Mrs. Kill-joy? Where’s it hurting
the worst?”
Mrs. Toomey continued to powder the
red tip of her nose until it showed pink.
“You’re about as cheerful
as an open grave-takes all the heart out
of me just to look at your face. Speak up, Little
Sunbeam, and tell Papa what you got on your chest?”
Mrs. Toomey laid down the powder puff.
“What if there should be some
slip-up, Jap? We’re letting ourselves in
for a dreadful disappointment if we count on it too
much.”
He shook off her hands from his shoulders
with an exasperated twitch.
“You’re the original Death’s
Head, Dell! Don’t you suppose I know what
I’m talking about? It’ll go through,”
confidently. “What’s made you think
it won’t?”
Mrs. Toomey hesitated, then timidly:
“I can’t get it out of
my head, Jap, but that he’s related to Kate,
and if that should happen to be so-
“Good Lord! So you’ve
dug that up to worry about? Look here-if
he’d had any interest in her he’d have
knocked me cold the first day he arrived.”
“What do you mean?” Mrs. Toomey asked
quickly.
“Just that. Her name happened
to come up, and I didn’t mince my words in telling
him about her past.”
“Oh, Jap! Whatever made you do that?”
His thin lips curled.
“Why shouldn’t I?
Damn her-I hate her, somehow. The upstart-the
gutter-snipe!”
She laid her hand across his mouth.
“You-shock me, Jap!
I don’t understand why you are so-venomous
toward Kate. Sometimes,” she looked at
him searchingly, “I’ve wondered if you’ve
injured her.”
“What do you mean?” He breathed hard,
in sudden excitement.
She stood for a moment twisting a
button on his coat-her eyes downcast.
Finally:
“Nothing-much.”
In the office of the Prouty House,
redolent of the juniper and spruce boughs which took
the bareness from the walls, the guests hungrily watched
the hands of the clock creep towards the fashionable
hour of eight.
“Among those present”
was Mr. Clarence Teeters, circulating freely in a
full dress coat and gray trousers-the latter
worn over a pair of high-heeled cowboy boots and the
former over a negligee shirt, beneath the cuffs of
which two leather straps for strengthening the wrists
peeped out. Fresh from the hands of the barber,
Mr. Teeters’ hair, sleek, glossy, fragrant,
and brushed straight back, gave him a marked resemblance
to a muskrat that has just come up from a dive.
With a sublimated confidence that
was sickening to such citizens as had known him when
he worked for wages and wore overalls, and particularly
to Toomey, who took Teeters’ success upon the
ranch where he himself had failed as a personal affront,
Mr. Teeters flitted among the ladies, as impartial
as a bee in a bed of hollyhocks, tossing off compliments
with an ease which was a revelation to those who remembered
the time when his brain stopped working in the presence
of the opposite sex quite as effectually as though
he had been hit with an axe.
Toomey not only resented Teeters’
presence but the informality of his manner toward
Prentiss, which Toomey regarded as his special prerogative.
He already had had an argument with Sudds as to the
advisability of including Teeters among the guests,
and now during a lull his judgment was fully verified.
Mr. Teeters with a proud glance at
the gaily draped room and at the table decorated with
real carnations and festoons of smilax, which
were visible through the double doors opening into
the dining room, inquired of Prentiss with hearty
friendliness:
“Say, feller, don’t this
swell lay-out kinda take you back to Chicago or New
York?”
What further indiscretions of speech
Teeters would have committed only his Maker knows,
for at the moment the clerk at the desk called his
name in an imperative voice. As the recipient
of a telegram, Teeters had the attention of everybody
in the room, and none could fail to observe his excitement
as he folded the telegram and returned it to its envelope.
“I got me a dude comin’
in on the train,” addressing Sudds. “Could
you fix a place for him to eat? The train bein’
late like this, he won’t git any supper otherwise.
I wasn’t expectin’ of him for a month yet.”
With an invitation thus publicly requisitioned,
as it were, there was no alternative but to assent.
The hands of the office clock were
close to eight when, as though on a signal, the hubbub
of social intercourse ceased and eyes followed eyes
to the top of the stairs where two white-slippered
feet showed through the rungs of the balustrade and
a slim hand sparkling with jewels slipped gracefully
along the polished rail. Then she appeared full
length, in a white dinner gown-clinging,
soft, exquisite in its simplicity and the perfection
of its lines. With pearls in her ears and about
her throat, her hair drawn back in a simple knot, Kate
looked like one of the favorites of fortune of whom
the Proutyites read in the illustrated magazines and
Sunday supplements. The least initiated was conscious
of the perfect taste and skilful workmanship which
had conspired to produce this result. Kate descended
slowly, with neither undue deliberation nor haste,
upon her lips the faint one-sided smile which was
characteristic.
The moment was as dramatic as if the
situation had been planned for the effect, since there
were few present to whose minds did not leap to the
picture of that other girl who had come bounding down
the stairs, grotesque of dress and as assured and
joyous in her ignorance as a frisky colt.
In a continued silence which no one
seemed to have the temerity or the presence of mind
to break, the Sheep Queen turned at the foot of the
stairway, and the various groups separated on a common
impulse to let her pass. She went straight to
Prentiss, whose greeting was a smile of adoring tenderness.
“Am I late, father?”
The sharp intake of breath throughout
the room might have come from one pair of lungs.
“Father!” The rumor was true then!
Amazement came first, and then uneasiness. What
effect would the relationship have upon their personal
interests? Had she any feeling which would lead
her to use her influence to their detriment?
Kate and her father would have had
more than their share of attention anywhere, for they
had the same distinction of carriage, the same grave
repose. Either one of them would have stood out
in a far more brilliant assembly than that gathered
in the Prouty House.
The social training Mrs. Abram Pantin
had received at church functions in Keokuk now came
to her rescue. Gathering herself, she was able
to chirp:
“This is a surprise!”
“You know my daughter, of course?”
to Mrs. Sudds, whose jaw had dropped, so that she
stood slightly open-mouthed, arrayed in a frock made
in the fashion of the Moyen age and recently handed
down from a great-uncle’s relict who had passed
on. Since this confection bulged where it should
have clung and clung where it should have bulged, it
was the general impression that Mrs. Sudds was out
in a maternity gown. Mrs. Neifkins in fourteen
gores stood beside Mrs. Toomey in a hobble skirt reminiscent
of her Chicago trip, while a faint odor of moth balls,
cedar chips and gasolene permeated the atmosphere
in the immediate vicinity of all this ancient elegance.
“We all have met,” Kate
replied, and her glance included the group. While
there was no emphasis to suggest that the sentence
contained any special significance, yet each of the
ladies was conscious of an uncomfortable warmth, and
the wish that dinner would be announced was so unanimous
that their heads turned simultaneously towards the
dining room; and, quite as if the concentrated thought
had produced the result, the proprietor of the Prouty
House conveyed the information to Sudds in a whisper
from the corner of his mouth that all was in readiness.
After some embarrassed uncertainty
as to who was to conduct whom, and which arm should
be used, the guests filed into the dining room at an
hour when, commonly, they were preparing to retire.
In the confusion Mrs. Toomey found
the opportunity to say:
“Jap, our goose is cooked!”
Adversity had sharpened her intuitions,
developed her sensibilities; what others might fear,
she knew, and this commonplace held all her disappointment,
all the chagrin and hopelessness that in an instant
had dissipated the roseate dreams she had again dared
to entertain.
Toomey was too dazed to reply.
What did it mean, he was asking himself in bewilderment
as he found the seat at the table which had been assigned
him. When he had disparaged and insulted Kate,
why had Prentiss not resented it verbally, knocked
him down? Why had he made a secret of their relationship?
Notwithstanding Gov’nor Sudds’s
best efforts, ably supported by Mr. Scales and Hiram
Butefish, the banquet did not promise to be an unqualified
success. There was a tension which did not make
for a proper appreciation of the excellently prepared
food. In truth, nobody was entirely at his ease
save Prentiss and Kate-and Abram Pantin.
The complacency of the cat who has eaten the canary
was discontent beside the satisfaction upon Mr. Pantin’s
face as he sent triumphant glances at his wife.
It was well towards the end of the banquet that the
belated train whistled and Mr. Teeters excused himself-first
reaching for a stalk of celery which he ate as he
went, and looking, as Mr. Butefish observed to fill
a pause, “like a pig with a corn husk hanging
out of its mouth.”
When the several courses had passed
in review, the tension increased with the realization
that the moment which meant so much to everyone present
had arrived at last.
So many times they had allowed themselves
to hope only to know disappointment. But Prentiss
inspired a confidence they never had had in the prospective
investors who had gone before. He was of quite
a different sort.
But the most adroit questioning had
failed to extract the slightest hint as to his intentions.
In any event, they would soon be out of their suspense,
and they waited with an impatience not too well concealed
for Gov’nor Sudds to finish his labored speech.
Toomey was called upon next but he
begged to be excused, intimating that he was a man
of deeds, not words.
Mr. Butefish then recounted the natural
resources of the country with a glibness that carried
the suggestion that he could do the same in his sleep,
and Mr. Scales arose to affirm his confidence in the
day when Prouty would be heralded as “the Denver
of the State.”
Noting the growing signs of restlessness,
the Gov’nor ignored the expectant looks of other
prominent citizens and called upon Mr. Prentiss, admitting,
as though he were conceding a disputed fact, that
the decision they were anticipating was a matter of
interest-even of considerable concern-to
the town.
So general was the appreciation of
what Prentiss’s speech meant that the cook came
out of the kitchen and the waitresses hovered within
hearing as Prentiss crumpled his napkin and slowly
got up.
He looked thoroughly the man of affairs
and of the world in his faultless dinner clothes,
while the air of power which emanated from him seemed
to be something concrete-definite.
In the pleasant voice and well-chosen words of one
accustomed to thinking on his feet, he thanked the
Boosters Club graciously for their hospitality
and courtesies extended during his short stay in the
town. Then, without further preliminaries, he
went direct to the subject which was uppermost in
every mind.
The project had merit, he was convinced
of that. It would take considerable capital to
enlarge the ditch and to put it in perfect condition,
but the returns would warrant the outlay in time.
The numerous failures had complicated the affairs
of the company somewhat, but patience and the desire
to be just would straighten these entanglements out.
The loosening of the tension as he
talked evidenced itself in audible breaths and growing
smiles upon every face. The encouraging words
acted as the stimulant of a hypodermic in sluggish
veins, eyes brightening and cheeks flushing at the
mental pictures conjured up by the prospect of getting
their money back.
“It is a proposition,”
Prentiss went on in his agreeable voice, “which
I should feel justified either in taking up or letting
alone. While it is legitimate and safe, in so
far as I can see, I have on the other hand interests
which claim a large share of my time, and this undertaking
would be an additional demand.
“Therefore,” his gaze
traveled the length of the table and back to where
Toomey sat, “I have concluded to determine the
matter by a somewhat unique means. I shall leave
the decision to my daughter here. Prouty, one
may say, is her home. She has grown up among you.
Many of you, no doubt, she numbers among her friends.
At any rate, she has the final say. I have informed
her of my intention, but I have no more notion than
yourselves what her answer will be, and,” he
added, “I have quite as much curiosity.”
Blank surprise was followed by the
exchange of startled, inquiring looks. Abram
Pantin was perhaps the only one who did not find some
grounds for uneasiness.
The swift transition from relief to
their former state of suspense was marked, and their
feelings found an outlet in a sudden nervous movement
of hands and feet. The town had given her rather
a hard deal in some ways, all were ready to admit
that, but had she felt it? Did she entertain
resentment because of it? She looked so young,
so feminine, so exquisitely soft that, somehow, they
thought not.
Toomey’s sallow skin had taken
on a saffron shade, and Mrs. Toomey sat with her thin
hands clenched in her lap, a strained smile fixed on
her face, waiting for-she knew not what.
Turning in his chair, Prentiss laid
his hand upon the back of Kate’s, and his keen
worldly eyes shone with the peculiar satisfaction which
human nature finds in its own flesh and blood when
it reflects credit upon themselves. Immeasurable
pride was in his face as he looked at her.
The miracle of clothes and an altered
frame of mind had done wonders for Kate. The
austere expression, the tense lines which came from
responsibility and unhappiness had been smoothed out,
while much of the tan of her years in the open air
had vanished in a few weeks in the moist climate of
the east. She looked not more than twenty-two
or three in the soft glow of the shaded lights, and
of the awkward self-conscious girl whom they remembered
on that night in this same dining room, there was
not a trace.
She had the quiet assurance of authority,
the poise of self-reliance and reserve force, but
there was not a shade of triumph in her face, at the
power with which her father had vested her.
There seemed not to be even heart
beats in the tense silence while Kate sat with her
eyes downcast, clinking, with her jewelled fingers,
a bit of ice against the sides of her drinking glass.
Even when she spoke finally she did not look up, but
began in a low, even voice:
“A fable that I read long ago
keeps coming to me to-night-the story of
a king, powerful and cruel, who, when his time came
to appear before the Great Judge, the single entry
in his favor that the Recording Angel could find was
the whim which had induced him when walking one day
to have a pig that he saw suffering in the gutter
put out of its misery.
“The story is applicable in
that as I sit here I realize that in all the years
I have been among you there is only one,” she
raised her eyes and indicated Teeters’s empty
chair, “who ever has done me the smallest disinterested
kindness.
“Until I got beyond the need
of it, I cannot remember one unselfish, friendly act,
or, at a time when every man’s hand was against
me, one sympathetic word or look. It sounds incredible,
but it is the truth. It seems the irony of Fate
indeed that this decision, which means so much to
you, should rest with me.”
She stopped and lowered her eyes again
to the glass which she twirled slowly as she deliberated,
as if choosing the words which should most exactly
express her thoughts.
She began again:
“You will excuse me if I speak
much of myself, but there is no other way to make
clear what I have to say.” She paused for
a breathless moment, and went on: “We all
have our peculiarities of temperament and mind, our
individual idiosyncracies, to distinguish us, and they
are as marked as physical characteristics, and it
happens to be mine that either a kindness or an injury
is something to be paid in full as surely as a promissory
note, if it is possible to do so.
“The debts I owe to you are
for acts of wanton cruelty that one would have to
look to Indians to find their counterpart, for deliberate
insults that had not even the excuse of personal animus
to justify them, but were due solely to the cowardice
which likes to strike where it is safe-the
eagerness to hurt, which seems to be the first instinct
of small minds and natures. I have no taste to
rehearse my grievances, but it is necessary, that
you may quite understand why it is that I feel as
I do towards you.”
Somewhat in the tone of a person reciting
a lesson she continued:
“I was a young girl when I first
came among you-to the dance here, into
this very room. I was ignorant, unsophisticated.
I met you with my hand outstretched, yearning for
your friendship; and you would as well have struck
me in my upturned face as do what you did.
“I had no mother, no woman friend
to tell me that I was absurd in my paper flowers and
the dress that I had made with my inexperienced fingers,
and you could find no excuse for my ridiculous appearance,
but enjoyed it openly.
“When you laughed in my face
you had not yet inflicted pain enough to satisfy you-you
had to turn the knife to see me quiver. And you
did-mercilessly-relishing my
humiliation when I had to leave.
“There was not one among you
generous enough to make allowance for my youth and
inexperience, and spare me. You saw only that
I was absurd in my fantastic clothes, and overly anxious
to be friendly. I was the daughter of ‘Jezebel
of the Sand Coulee’ and the protegee of a ‘sheepherder.’
“I did not know you then as
I do now and your pose of superiority impressed me;
I took you at your own valuation and overestimated
you; so I was all but crushed by your condemnation.
I was like a child that is whipped without knowing
for what it is being punished.”
She paused a moment before going on.
“Worse things came to me afterwards,
but none from which I suffered more keenly-in
a different way, perhaps, but not more acutely.
The wounds you inflicted that night left scars that
never have healed entirely.
“The turning-point in my life
came when ‘Mormon Joe’ was murdered.
He was more than a guardian and a benefactor-he
had been father, mother, teacher, to me, but with
no other grounds than that I benefited by his death,
the stigma of murder was placed upon me. There
was not evidence to hold me, so I remained a suspect,
proven neither guilty nor innocent.
“The murder was little more
than an agreeable break in the monotony to most of
you, but it revolutionized the world for me-changed
the whole scheme of my life-and,”
with a smile that was tinged with bitterness, “demonstrated
to my entire satisfaction the extent to which character
is affected by environment.”
She went on thoughtfully:
“I have come to believe that
to know human nature-at least to know it
as its worst-one must be the victim of some
discreditable misfortune in a small community.
Moral cowardice, ingratitude, the greed which is ready
to take advantage of some one unable to make an effective
protest, the gratuitous insults offered the ‘under
dog’ because he is helpless to fight back-he
discovers it all, and when all is done he has little
faith in human nature left.
“This experience I had at your
hands, to the last ounce. I know the ‘friendship’
that couldn’t ‘stand the gaff’ of
public opinion, the ingratitude that makes no count
of personal sacrifice, the rapacity that takes it
to the border of dishonesty to attain its end.
Yet, curiously enough, after the lapse of years these
things shrink into comparative insignificance beside
the uncalled for insolence, unwarranted affronts,
which were offered me by many of you with whom I had
not even a speaking acquaintance.
“My friendlessness aroused no
pity in your hearts; I was only an unresisting target
at which to throw a convenient stone. For years
I stood out in the open, as it were, with the storms
to whip the life out of me, and not one of you offered
me a cloak.
“Upon any nature this experience
would have had its effect-most women, I
think, it would have crushed. In me it developed
traits that in other circumstances might always have
lain dormant. Along with a pride that was tremendous,
it aroused a desire for revenge that was savage in
its ferocity. I’ve lived for some such
hour as this-worked, and sacrificed my
happiness for it.
“If it could have been of my
own planning I could not have conceived of a more
gratifying situation than this.
“I know how much my decision
means to you; I know that there isn’t one here
who would not be affected directly or indirectly by
the collapse of this project; that it will take years
for you to get back even to the position you were
in when you came, quite as well as I realize that its
completion would put you on your feet.”
She stopped again while they waited
for her to go on in a silence that was painful.
“When I’ve visualized
‘The Day’ in my waking dreams, I’ve
wondered if I should weaken and forgive my enemies
as they always do in books-if any argument
could move me to relent-if any impulse would
soften me toward you-if I might not even
pity you.
“One never knows, but I thought
not. And I was right. The desperation of
your situation isn’t the sort of pathos that
appeals to me. I find that in my nature there
is nothing ‘noble’ that pleads for you.
I neither pity nor forgive you.
“Yet this moment is a disappointment.
Instead of the sweetness of revenge, I feel only indifference,
for I realize as never before how I magnified your
importance, that I looked at you through the wrong
end of the telescope; and along with my apathy is
a feeling of dismay that I have spent all these years
working to retaliate upon foes that are not worth
what it has cost. The worst thing one could wish
you is to be yourselves, for there isn’t one
among you who has the qualities to lift him above
his present level of mediocrity.”
A resentful movement to go was initiated
by Gov’nor Sudds.
“Wait a moment!” Kate
raised her hand imperiously. “I presume
you think you have your answer?” She shook her
head slowly. Then, with increased deliberation:
“I told you that I always pay my debts.
I owe my success to you. It is my enemies who
have given me the patience to sit hour after hour
and herd sheep-not for weeks nor months,
but for years. It is my enemies who have given
me the courage to stagger on through cold and snow
when the blood in my veins was ice. It is my enemies
who have given me the endurance to work in emergencies
until I have dropped; to endure poverty, loneliness,
derision-and worse. When failures have
knocked me down, it is you, my enemies, who have given
me the strength to pick myself up and go on.
“Because of you, I am the better
able to appreciate true friendship, integrity, the
many qualities which go to make up greatness of mind
and heart, and that in happier circumstances I have
learned do exist. So you see, if you have taken
much, perhaps you have given more, and I have an obligation
to discharge. Therefore,” she turned to
her father with a slightly inquiring look, “if
the decision still remains with me, I should like
to know that the project will go through.”
The tense and pent-up feelings of
the guests found an outlet in long-drawn breaths and
indignant but unconvincing murmurs that “they’d
rather starve,” which did not prevent all attention
focusing upon Prentiss, whose face wore a forbidding
grimness from which all semblance of friendliness
had long since fled.
“If I had known-if
I had dreamed of half of this-I am frank
to confess that you could not have interested me in
this proposition for the hundredth part of a second.
But it will be completed because it is my daughter’s
wish. However,” with cold emphasis, “upon
my own terms.
“You may, or may not know, that
the involved affairs of the project leave it practically
optional with a new company whether they recognize
the claims against former companies or repudiate these
debts.
“The local claims amount to
something like sixty-five thousand dollars, which
is a sum of considerable importance, distributed in
a town of this size. I had intended to pay these
claims in full, largely as a matter of sentiment,
presuming that among those affected there were at least
a few of my daughter’s friends. What she
has said to-night gives the matter a new face.
It is now a business proposition with me. I am
no philanthropist where my interests or affections
are not concerned.
“The offer I am about to make
you can take or you can leave, but I’ve a notion
self-interest will prevail over your temporary pique,
since you no doubt realize that unless something is
done almost immediately this segregated land will
revert to the state.
“I will not pay any debts of
former companies, and I will take over the controlling
stock-not at the figure at which you are
holding it, but at what I consider a fair price.
I will enlarge the ditch and complete the project
so that it will meet every requirement of the state
engineers and turn it over to the settlers under it
when it has been demonstrated to be a complete success.”
They thought he had done, and again
looked at each other with deep-drawn breaths, when
he resumed:
“There is one more condition
upon which I insist: It is that in the purchase
of the stock I deal with the stockholders direct.
There shall be no commission paid to a go-between.”
He looked at Toomey as he spoke. “My reason
for this is purely personal, but nevertheless my offer
rests upon this stipulation.” There was
no mistaking the finality of his tone or the cold
enmity of his voice.
In a night of surprises this seemed
the climax. What did it mean, since there had
not been the slightest hint that Toomey and Prentiss
were not the warmest of friends? In the dramatic
silence each could hear his neighbor breathe.
Toomey looked stunned, then, as he
recovered himself, the vein in his temple swelled
and his sallow face darkened to ugly belligerence.
“I don’t understand this!”
he cried, raising his voice as he endeavored to return
Prentiss’s steely gaze with one of defiance.
“But I’ll serve notice now that I’ll
have the commission to which I’m entitled, or
I’ll sue for it and tie the whole thing up!”
Gov’nor Sudds started to his
feet to voice a hot protest, as did other leading
citizens who saw the chance to rehabilitate their fortunes
vanish at the threat, but they were overshadowed, overborne
by the more vigorous personality of Mr. Teeters, who
suddenly dominated the scene from the door of the
dining room where he had been listening intently.
As if no longer able to contain himself, Teeters strode
forward, shaking at Toomey the finger of emphasis:
“Then,” he cried, “you’ll
do your suin’ from a cell! If I hold in
any longer I’m goin’ to choke! I’m
goin’ to speak, if she won’t.”
He motioned towards Kate. “I want these
folks to know what that yella-back has been keepin’
to himself all these years for some reason that only
himself and the Almighty knows. He owned the
gun that killed Mormon Joe! He sold it to the
‘breed,’ Mullendore! He could have
proved Kate Prentiss’s innocence any time he
wanted to-and he kept his mouth shut!
I’m no legal sharp, but I won’t believe
there ain’t some law that’ll put the likes
o’ him where he belongs.”
Toomey shrank under the attack as
though beneath actual blows; he seemed to contract
beneath the focused gaze of eyes that contained anger,
scorn, in some instances, incredulity. He looked
for a moment as though he were going to faint, then
he clutched the edge of the table cloth in a convulsive
grip, and shouted with an attempt at his old braggadocio:
“It’s a lie!”
“It’s the truth!”
Teeters thundered, opposite. “Mullendore
confessed. Anyhow, I’ve got other proof-the
original owner of the gun who left it at your house
when he was a kid. Feller-come out.”
“Disston!” Toomey gasped
as Hugh stepped from the semidusk of the corridor
into the light. The thing he had feared most since
some ugly perversity of his nature had kept him silent
because of his dislike of Mormon Joe and Kate had
come to pass.
In the swift movement of events, matters
of more interest were transpiring than Toomey’s
nervous collapse. With a cry that has no counterpart
save as it comes straight from a woman’s heart,
Kate had sprung to her feet and gone to Disston with
her hands outstretched.
“Hughie! Hughie! You’ve
come back. Speak-say something so I’ll
know that I’m awake.” The Boosters’
Club and its guests did not exist for Kate.
“Katie-Katie Prentice,
is this wonderful girl you?” His face was radiant
with admiration and amazement as he held her at arms’
length.
“For months and months, Hughie,”
she said softly, “I’ve wanted to tell
you that I was wrong and you were right. There
is nothing of any great importance except love. Without
it success is empty-empty as a gourd!
Tell me, Hughie-tell me quick that it isn’t
too late to make amends for my mistake!”
Her answer was already in Disston’s
eyes so his whisper was superfluous-“I
told you it was for always, Kate.”